Monsters really rock in 'Too Much Horror Business'

borrelliRT @Mary_C_Wells: I really like all of the EDM versions of Paul McCartney songs @lollapalooza

A saucer man from "Invasion of the Saucer Men" (1957)

Kirk Hammett: "I got it from a collector in Los Angeles who would comb studio warehouses for studio props and I think maybe knew the designer of this monster, Paul Blaisdell. So I don't really know where it's from, but it's ridiculous, and that's its charm, of course. The movie, I loved. It has Frank Gorshin, who was the Riddler on the old Batman series. The aliens inject alcohol into people's veins. It comes out of the tips of their fingers! Which is ingenious because cops are saying 'Drunk!' Meanwhile, the whole time, the people who run into the aliens are saying no, they just saw a flying saucer!"

Kirk Hammett: "I got it from a collector in Los Angeles who would comb studio warehouses for studio props and I think maybe knew the designer of this monster, Paul Blaisdell. So I don't really know where it's from, but it's ridiculous, and that's its charm, of course. The movie, I loved. It has Frank Gorshin, who was the Riddler on the old Batman series. The aliens inject alcohol into people's veins. It comes out of the tips of their fingers! Which is ingenious because cops are saying 'Drunk!' Meanwhile, the whole time, the people who run into the aliens are saying no, they just saw a flying saucer!"

Rock star money buys stuff. Homes, planes, influence. For Kirk Hammett, the longtime guitarist of Metallica, rock star money also bought the horror-movie childhood he never quite had. Around the mid-1980s, as the band started to make a name for itself, Hammett, who grew up in San Francisco obsessed with monster movies and comic books, began collecting the monster movie paraphernalia that he once pined for but could never afford as a child. Newly flush, he began contacting dealers and developing relationships with collectors around the world. And soon he owned many of the same toys and models and masks that he had once ogled in the back pages of the legendary horror fanzine “Famous Monsters of Filmland.” Then he went further: He bought original movie costumes, props, Halloween masks, ultra-rare posters, even the original art that had graced the covers of “Famous Monsters.”

On the phone recently, Hammett said his collection is the second-best collection of monster movie stuff in the world: "There is one guy out there who has more posters, but he's been collecting 50 years. And he only collects posters. That's what this thing is like. A lot of people who collect toys just collect toys. I collect, uh ... more." From the evidence of "Too Much Horror Business," the entertaining new coffee table book ($29.95, Abrams) about his collection, Hammett is being frighteningly modest. Only a fraction of the 1,000-plus horror items he's gathered is represented. We asked him to reflect on a handful of the most important pieces in his collection.

Kirk Hammett's "Too Much Horror Business," an entertaining new coffee table book ($29.95, Abrams) about the rock star's collection of horror movie memorabilia includes only a fraction of the 1,000-plus horror items he's gathered over the years. Chris Borrelli recently asked Hammett to reflect on...

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Chicago's ban on plastic bags starts to take effect at many big stores Saturday, but an alderman who helped craft the law already is talking about changing it in order to thwart a few large retail chains that he says are trying to skirt the new rules.